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Actis is a London-based global investment firm specializing in sustainable infrastructure and private equity across emerging markets. The firm finances, builds, and operates assets primarily within the energy transition, digital infrastructure, and real estate sectors across Asia, Africa, Latin America, and the Middle East. Operating with approximately 350 employees, the firm has raised roughly $26 billion in capital since its inception and closed its Actis Energy 5 fund with $6 billion in investable capital. In 2024, Actis was acquired by General Atlantic, creating a combined investment platform with $108 billion in assets under management. The firm's historical investment portfolio includes notable infrastructure and renewable energy companies such as Atlas Renewable Energy and Lekela Power. Actis was founded in 2004 as a spin-out from the UK government's CDC Group by Paul Fletcher and David Morley.
Key people at Actis.
Actis is a global investment firm specializing in sustainable infrastructure, focusing on energy, digital infrastructure, long-life infrastructure, real estate, and private equity in growth markets including Africa, Asia, Latin America, the Middle East, and Central/Eastern Europe.[1][2][4] Its mission is to build and operate critical infrastructure delivering essential services, applying an "industrialist mindset" with deep operational expertise to achieve risk-adjusted returns while prioritizing sustainability to mitigate risks, create value, and future-proof assets.[2][3] Actis emphasizes values like accountability, collaboration, transparency, inclusion, and sustainability, having raised circa $26 billion since inception and now operating as General Atlantic's sustainable infrastructure arm with combined AUM of $108 billion post-2024 acquisition.[2][4]
The firm's investment philosophy centers on growth markets for superior returns, transforming portfolio companies into sustainability leaders through active ownership and sector-specific solutions like the energy transition and digital revolution.[2][3][6] Key sectors include energy infrastructure, long-life infrastructure (e.g., utilities), digital infrastructure, real estate, and private equity, often targeting net-zero acceleration and essential services.[4][5] While not a traditional startup ecosystem player, Actis influences it by scaling infrastructure in emerging markets, enabling tech-enabled growth in energy, digital, and real estate for startups and scale-ups reliant on reliable power, connectivity, and urban development.[3][6]
Actis was spun out from CDC Group plc (the UK's development finance institution, founded in 1948) in July 2004, when CDC managers and staff acquired a 60% stake for £373,000, inheriting management of $900 million in existing CDC investments under a five-year guarantee.[1][2] This marked its evolution from a development-focused entity to an independent firm targeting buy-and-build strategies in emerging markets.[1]
Key milestones include assuming management of Abraaj Group's Middle East and North Africa funds in 2018 amid Abraaj's collapse, leveraging its emerging-markets expertise.[1] In 2019, it closed the $1.23 billion Actis Long Life Infrastructure Fund (ALLIF), shifting toward yield-focused, brownfield core infrastructure.[1] The firm was acquired by General Atlantic in 2024 (finalized October), integrating as its sustainable infrastructure platform and expanding scale.[2][6] Over 20+ years, Actis has built on a 70-year legacy, raising $26 billion and managing $12.7 billion in portfolio AUM.[2][4]
Actis rides the global energy transition, digital revolution, and economic power shift to growth markets, investing in infrastructure that underpins tech ecosystems—like reliable power for data centers, digital infrastructure for connectivity, and sustainable real estate for urban tech hubs.[4][6] Timing is ideal amid net-zero mandates and emerging-market urbanization, where infrastructure gaps create high-return opportunities; market forces like lower-cost sustainable capital and ESG investor demand favor its model.[2][3][5]
It influences the ecosystem by enabling tech scalability in underserved regions—e.g., powering AI/data growth in Africa/Asia via renewable energy, or supporting digital services in Latin America/Middle East—positioning it as a bridge between traditional infrastructure and tech-driven sustainability, distinct from pure VC firms.[1][6] This amplifies impact for tech startups dependent on stable grids and networks.
Actis is poised for expansion as General Atlantic's infrastructure arm, targeting new markets like Japan real estate and scaling digital/long-life assets amid rising demand for net-zero infrastructure.[2][6][8] Trends like AI-driven energy needs, 5G/edge computing, and climate-resilient urban development will shape its path, with sustainability unlocking cheaper capital and premium exits.[3][5] Its influence may evolve toward hybrid tech-infra plays, blending private equity with growth equity to lead in growth-market tech enablement—building on its spinout roots to deliver enduring value in a decarbonizing world.[1][4]
Key people at Actis.